Success, for you, must reflect the efforts you make to bring order to your inner and outer world. Although material reality is important to you, you are not motivated by monetary gain or status or a "top" position in the world. Deep down, you are a craftsman, whether you work with material substance or the stuff of the human psyche or body. To integrate, polish, refine, craft, and make whole and healed are the tasks toward which your spirit impels you, and your work needs to allow you to do these things in order to feel you are living a meaningful life. Being useful is fundamental to any real sense of success, and you need to know that your life is fulfilling a useful purpose or serving the higher realities in which you believe. More than many people, you are capable of loving work for work’s sake, for it helps you to feel connected to the deeper rhythms of daily life and the larger pattern in which you instinctively know your own life is embedded. Integrity is also extremely important to you, on the most profound level: you need to serve your inner ideal rather than accommodate the external world simply for security or material gain. A certain fear of material instability and disorder could make you too focused on the purely material aspects of your work, blocking your sense of connection to deeper rhythms and subtler levels of experience. This could make you "lose the forest for the trees", and anxiety might make you spend too much time on mundane details and too little on the broader symbolic aspects of the skills you need to develop in your work. However, your anxiety could also serve a positive purpose, as long as you do not become too rigid in your efforts to structure and order your daily life.
Your need to feel firmly anchored in material reality can help you to work hard to refine your talents and find just the right practical vehicles; and your powerful need to feel you are a useful member of society could impel you to offer real and lasting service to others, helping you to feel you are doing your share in the integration of the larger unity of which you know yourself to be a part. You need to work to make bridges, heal what has been spoiled, integrate what has fallen into disunity, and bring to its most efficient and healthy functioning whatever has been contaminated, ignored, or allowed to fall into disrepair. You might do this with objects, with buildings, with the physical body, with the psyche, or with nature or the plant and animal kingdoms. A true vocation, for you, must allow you to bring to your immediate world a little of the order and harmony which you know to be the underpinning of all existence.